On Sat, Feb 6, 2010 at 2:51 AM, Filipe David Manana <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > Since we have now the attachment compression feature in trunk, I would like > to see the replication taking advantage of it. I submitted a patch for the > pull replication yesterday: > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COUCHDB-639 > > I think nobody had yet the time to review it and test it.
I took a look at the patch (looks great) but I think it it's ok to have it in just in trunk. I'll probably +1 merging it to the 1.0 release branch after the 0.11 release. But I don't think it's worth holding up the 0.11 release over. > I'm also working on another one for the push replication, which is not so > straightforward as the pull replication, and depends on some code submitted > for the pull replication patch. The replicator will be welcome to minor patches like this in the run up to 1.0, as it does not effect core features / stability in the same way the storage APIs do. > > Of course this is not a must (in my opinion at least) but just a plus, as it > saves CPU time and network bandwidth. > > cheers > > On Sat, Feb 6, 2010 at 2:35 AM, Damien Katz <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hello CouchDB contributors! It's time to do a 0.11.0 release, which should >> be the last release before 1.0. >> >> I know lots of people have particular features they want before we hit 1.0. >> but that will always be true. I can list 3 things I wish we had, but I'm >> willing to live without them for now so we can push ahead. >> >> I propose we create the 0.11.0 branch, and that will eventually become 1.0. >> New features will continue to go into trunk. Also new features can still go >> into the 0.11/1.0 branch, but they will need consensus from the community >> from this point on. >> >> If the community generally agrees, I'd like the branch created monday. If >> you have objections, please air them now. >> >> -Damien > > > > > -- > Filipe David Manana, > [email protected] > PGP key - http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xC569452B > > "Reasonable men adapt themselves to the world. > Unreasonable men adapt the world to themselves. > That's why all progress depends on unreasonable men." > -- Chris Anderson http://jchrisa.net http://couch.io
